Kuwait Times

Netherland­s withdraws its ambassador from Turkey

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THE HAGUE: The Netherland­s announced yesterday it was withdrawin­g its ambassador from Turkey, and will refuse to allow Ankara to post one in the country as diplomatic ties plunge to new lows. Relations have deteriorat­ed in the past months, after Dutch officials barred a Turkish minister from attending a rally in Rotterdam on the eve of the March general elections here.

Despite recent high-level talks between the two countries, “we have not been able to agree on the way normalizat­ion should take place,” Foreign Minister Halbe Zijlstra said in a statement. The Dutch government has therefore “decided to officially withdraw the Netherland­s’ ambassador in Ankara, who has not had access to Turkey since March 2017,” the foreign ministry added. “As long as the Netherland­s has no ambassador to Turkey, the Netherland­s will also not issue permission for a new Turkish ambassador to take up duties in the Netherland­s.”

Relations between the two NATO allies have spiraled to an all-time low after the Netherland­s expelled Turkey’s Family Minister Fatma Betul Sayan Kayar in March. The country had also barred another minister’s plane from landing as both Turkish politician­s sought to attend a Rotterdam rally of Dutch-Turkish citizens in favor of last April’s Turkish referendum. But Betul Sayan Kayar defied the Dutch government ban, arriving by car from Germany to press for the powers of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to be extended in the referendum.

No ‘magic formula’

Protests erupted in the port city as Dutch police stopped her addressing the rally, and escorted her out of the country. Riot police had to move in to break up an angry demonstrat­ion using dogs, horses and water cannon, which added to political tensions just days before the Dutch general elections. Furious Turkish officials in vain demanded an apology for the minister’s treatment from Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte.

And the Dutch ambassador, who had been abroad at the time, was blocked from returning to Turkey. Erdogan even accused the Dutch of behaving like “fascists” in their treatment of the Turkish ministers-comments which triggered anger in the Netherland­s occupied by Nazi Germany in World War II. The Netherland­s is home to some 400,000 people of Turkish origin, and the two countries have had diplomatic relations for some four centuries. But ties first began to strain in 2012 over a row about a Turkish boy adopted by Dutch lesbian parents. And in 2016 Turkish-Dutch journalist Ebru Umar was arrested and briefly detained after she tweeted comments critical of Erdogan. She was only released after an interventi­on from the Dutch foreign ministry. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? BRUSSELS: Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs Halbe Zijlstra arrives seen at the European Council in Brussels. The Netherland­s announced yesterday it was withdrawin­g its ambassador from Turkey.
— AFP BRUSSELS: Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs Halbe Zijlstra arrives seen at the European Council in Brussels. The Netherland­s announced yesterday it was withdrawin­g its ambassador from Turkey.

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